Privacy as a right or as a commodity in the online world: the limits of regulatory reform and self-regulation
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-1-2017
Abstract
The increased use of the internet and information technology to enable online transactions, distribute information and customer reviews through ecommerce and social networking sites, online advertising, and data mining is both creating efficiencies and challenging our privacy. This paper highlights the growing fear that current federal and state laws in the United States are not adequate to protect the privacy of the data collected while we process electronic transactions or browse the internet for information. The notion of efficiency and cost-benefit are used to justify a certain level of privacy loss, thus treating privacy as a commodity to be transacted rather than a right to be defended. To address developing concerns about personal privacy invasions, we discuss the role and limits that both government regulation and self-regulation play in protecting our privacy.
Identifier
84929852691 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Electronic Commerce Research
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10660-015-9187-2
e-ISSN
15729362
ISSN
13895753
First Page
185
Last Page
203
Issue
2
Volume
17
Recommended Citation
Walsh, Diana; Parisi, James M.; and Passerini, Katia, "Privacy as a right or as a commodity in the online world: the limits of regulatory reform and self-regulation" (2017). Faculty Publications. 9536.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/9536
